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The Mermaid Chair
Sue Monk Kidd

Penguin Audio, 2005
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Not as good as bees...

I thoroughly enjoyed Sue Monk Kidd's The Secret Life of Bees, so I was anxious to read The Mermaid Chair. This book is nowhere near the quality of The Secret Life.

The Mermaid Chair opens when Jessie Sullivan receives an early morning phone call that her mother has cut off one of her fingers. Sullivan and her mom have a difficult relationship at best, and it has been years since Sullivan visited her on Egret Island (an imaginary island outside of Charleston, SC). But she now has no choice but to return to Egret Island and deal with her religious-fanatic mom, Nelle. In the process, she must deal with the secrets that her mother and friends have been hiding from Sullivan. These secrets are most probably responsible for Nelle's mental instability as well as Sullivan's guilt about her childhood. She also falls in love with Brother Thomas, a monk on the island (Sullivan is married with a college-aged daughter). Overall, I couldn't develop much sympathy or affection for any Kidd's characters, except for Sullivan's saintly husband, Hugh. Some parts of The Mermaid Chair were excellent, including Kidd's descriptions of the low country of South Carolina. However, the ending was very predictable and the reader just knows what will happen.

The Mermaid Chair is a good beach book--especially if you're near Charleston, SC. But if you're looking for great literature, you'll need to look elsewhere.




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Mindless entertainment

This book is the most generic of Beach Books. Light and fluffy, with some Made For TV Movie drama thrown in (should she leave her husband? Why is her mother crazy?), it's engaging enough to be able to finish but I found it impossible to really like. The characters are standard (Crazy Mom, Sexy Other Guy, Hip Collegiate Daughter and the protagonist, while obviously supposed to be sympathetic and "deep," comes off as too beige, self-important and indecisive to respect.

If this book is lying around and you need to kill a few hours, go for it. But don't look for anything of intellectual value or moral character.


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The Mermaid Chair: The Seat of Questions of Ethics

The story begins with Jesse Sullivan returning home to Egret Island to care for her aging mother who had just purposefully cut off her finger. Discovering that her mother had done this as part of a mysterious ritual, Jesse ultimately discovers secrets about her family's past, as well as about what she wants from her own life. The Island, described in detail as if it were a main character itself, is crucial and effective to the presentation of characters and ideas. The Mermaid Chair, also central to the plot of this story, as well as to the small town, is discovered to have been vital in Jesse's own family's history. The "Thorn Birds"- style subplot adds an enjoyable romance to the story. Ms Kidd combines mysticism and legend to give this story an eerie tone. This is a wonderful story which questions the importance of ethics when they conflict with saving others.


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



Sue Monk KiddÂ?s stunning debut, The Secret Life of Bees, has transformed her into a genuine literary star. Now, in her much-anticipated new novel, Kidd has woven a transcendent tale that will thrill her legion of fans and cement her reputation as one of the most remarkable writers at work today.

Inside the abbey of a Benedictine monastery on tiny Egret Island, just off the coast of South Carolina, resides a beautiful and mysterious chair ornately carved with mermaids and dedicated to a saint who, legend claims, was a mermaid before her conversion.

Jessie SullivanÂ?s conventional life has been Â?molded to the smallest space possible.Â? So when she is called home to cope with her motherÂ?s startling and enigmatic act of violence, Jessie finds herself relieved to be apart from her husband, Hugh. Jessie loves Hugh, but on Egret IslandÂ? amid the gorgeous marshlands and tidal creeksÂ?she becomes drawn to Brother Thomas, a monk who is mere months from taking his final vows. What transpires will unlock the roots of her motherÂ?s tormented past, but most of all, as Jessie grapples with the tension of desire and the struggle to deny it, she will find a freedom that feels overwhelmingly right.

What inspires the yearning for a soul mate? Few writers have explored, as Kidd does, the lush, unknown region of the feminine soul where the thin line between the spiritual and the erotic exists. The Mermaid Chair is a vividly imagined novel about the passions of the spirit and the ecstasies of the body; one that illuminates a womanÂ?s self-awakening with the brilliance and power that only a writer of KiddÂ?s ability could conjure.


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